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Hi guys, what do you normally do for this? It seems that in all my mixes, even if I pan something 100% to the right, it doesn't sound like it is way over there. Then I listen to a professional song and they just have such a brilliant space that I can't seem to achieve.

Vocals?
Electric Guitar?
Bass? (I imagine yes for this one)
Acoustic Guitar?

Thanks for any help!

Comments

natural Tue, 05/05/2009 - 19:54

If you're trying to capture just the instrument - record in mono.
If you're trying to capture the room as well as the instrument, record in stereo.
If your room is not a nice sounding room, record just the instrument and add stereo reverb from a box or plugin.

The only exception is when the instrument is a particularly large one, like a grand piano, or a drum kit. then you might want to record in stereo even if you don't want the room sound.

EricIndecisive Tue, 05/05/2009 - 19:59

I see, thanks for that. Now some more questions!

Do you add reverb to everything, even if it's just a little bit?

How many tracks for each instrument do you have for the rythm track of a 'typical' song? Is it different for distorted guitars?

When doing two tracks, would you use, say, two different guitars so that they have some tonal variation?

EricIndecisive Tue, 05/05/2009 - 20:01

Guitarfreak wrote: If it is a mono source then record in mono, and if the source is stereo record in stereo. A single mic is a mono source unless it is specified a "stereo mic" It will then have two XLR outputs.

I see, so when looking at the waveform, I should only have ONE waveform, and not one for the left and right, correct? When applying reverb and such though, does it still add the same space to one track? (I'm using adobe audition 1.5, if you're trying to see my mental picture)

Guitarfreak Tue, 05/05/2009 - 20:18

Again it really comes down to preference and the actual engineer and what they intend on doing. Recording is an art, not a science. You may think that the bands are the artists, but as soon as they step into the studio, they are the paint and it is up to the engineer to decide how he wants the paint to hit the canvas. :) Someone once linked me this, if it doesn't answer your question at least you have gained something.

http://audio.tutsplus.com/tutorials/recording/6-stereo-miking-techniques-you-can-use-today/

EricIndecisive Tue, 05/05/2009 - 20:37

Bookmarked. Thank you. I guess it is just my inexperience then that keeps me separated so far.

I use a firepod, AA 1.5, Rode NT2a, AT2020, SM57 & 58. That's all my equipment, lol.

I'm going to post my song here - but not for critiquing purposes (I know there is a section for that!). (Halfway through are when all the instruments come in)

video from Audix

This style is very similar to Jack Johnson. I guess what I am really looking for is WHAT is making the huge difference in quality? The equipment? The mix? Are my tracks not clear enough? How are his vocals in your face and mine are back there somewhere?

I'm sorry if this topic should be moved now!

JoeH Wed, 05/06/2009 - 09:25

Going with the paint/painter analogy, there's all kinds of ways you can paint your picture:

1. One instrument, One mic, mono track, pan it around as needed to fit in the mix with other tracks.

2. One instrument, a good room, two mics set up in stereo (always checking for mono compatibility as well), and again, move it around in the mix as needed. (call this "natural" or organic stereo, if you will.)

3. One instrument, one mic, and a good plug in (or two) to create room ambience after-the-fact. Sometimes this is a better way to go, esp when getting several mono sources to "sit" in the panoramic mix properly. It might be "Small room" reverb, or simply ambience, etc. You can also simply 'Aux send" your mono signal to a speaker in a live room and create a stereo return with two mics. (Call this "Pseudo" stereo, if you will.)

4. One complex instrument (drums, piano, marimba, castanettes, marching band, etc.) and as above; 2 mics stereo, place in the mix as needed, etc.

5. For a group or ensemble, Mic the room as well as the band. You'll get the good clean sound coming off the DI's and close-mics, but you'll have a basic L-R panoramic image of the band in action (assuming they're set up the way they want to be heard from the front.) You may get bleed this way (which could affect your ability to overdub afterwards), but it's one of the most desirable and "natural" sounding types of stereo.

EricIndecisive Wed, 05/06/2009 - 18:46

Thanks JoeH. I'm glad to know this. It's good to know that it's all dependent upon what you want, and that you can still get really good recordings with a mono source, and don't always need 2 microphones.

One thing that I still don't understand though - As far as firewire interfaces go (I have a good computer so that method is probably best for me) what is the difference between a mackie with all those fancy knobs, compared to my firepod?

How important are external preamps + compressors during the recording phase, compared to doing it all digitally?

Also, what you said about the drums being a complex instrument - perhaps using fruity loops + ezdrummer is part of the reason my songs sound flat?

Interesting technique with the pseudo-stereo as well! I can't wait till I can eventually get my own house, and set up a proper room for recording. Oh well, only one more semester of college to go!

Thanks again.

Guitarfreak Wed, 05/06/2009 - 18:54

To answer one of your questions. A Mackie mixer is a channel router, your firepod is a digital interface. The difference is that your interface actually processes the sound and prepares it for a DAW. Big mixers nowadays are mainly for show, and to use as a midi controller. You are much better off at this stage with your firepod. I wish I got one myself, it will take you far.

TheJackAttack Wed, 05/06/2009 - 19:33

sarNz: What you just described is a control surface. The Mackie Onyx mixer is both a small format mixer and a firewire interface with good preamps. It is not a control surface. Some digital mixers (not the Onyx) can also double as control surfaces.

GuitarFreak: Get over the FP10. It is just one of many interfaces and it is not necessarily the right choice for everyone. I'm not saying it's necessarily bad but you're like a one pony show when it comes to recommendations and knowledge. The converters in the Onyx firewire option are equal to your FP10. I prefer the Onyx pre's to many others including many in the Presonus line-enough that I own an 800R whose converters are superior to the FP.

Now, the Onyx is not the be all end all either. Which is why I have a set of True Precision 8's and a few other things too.

Guitarfreak Wed, 05/06/2009 - 19:44

Haha, thanks Jack, it's good to get a good spanking every once in a while. I do refer many people to either the FB or FP. They work and aren't terribly expensive. I can sense when people have budget on the mind and are just clueless. I tend to jump on these opportunities because it's basically all I know. I do tend to stay out of the topics that are above my head. If you want me to let the vets handle these situations that's fine. I'm just having fun being part of this community. :D

EricIndecisive Wed, 05/06/2009 - 19:52

Thanks for the clarification Jack. Yeah, I imagined there had to be something better about those other interfaces to justify the cost. But it seems that for the price of those True 8's you were talking about, I'll be sticking with this for a while.

So that being said, if the Firepod is pretty good as far as converters go, would I see benefits to buying a small tube preamp to go before it in the chain? Am I thinking about this totally wrong? Would a compressor be a worthwhile purchase as well?

TheJackAttack Wed, 05/06/2009 - 19:57

You're fine. I'm just a curmudgeon and old coot in training. All I'm saying is maybe be a little circumspect in your gear comparisons. Offer several solutions rather than the identical one time after time. There's always more than one way to skin a cat.

You should see how acerbic (blunt) I am on the horn lists...

soapfloats Wed, 05/06/2009 - 21:33

It seems to me you've got enough tools to work with.
The general recommendation around here is to avoid cheaper tube preamps.
That means spending a lot.

You'd be better served to practice the trade and make a few bucks doing it first. I got the gear bug and it bit me bad.
I would have done some things differently.

Seriously, that's a solid starter set of mics. The only upgrade you might make would be an interface w/ more I/O options. Once you get used to using that, it becomes time to think about more/better mics and better preamps.

EricIndecisive Thu, 05/07/2009 - 20:34

soapfloats - noted, i won't buy any cheap preamps. eh, i don't think i'll ever be able to make money doing this. i just want to keep getting better at it so my music sounds as good as it can. not only is it a blast to write songs in lots of different styles, but the recording and mixing is really fun as well. i'll keep practicing, spending more time worrying about mic placement and such. hopefully i can change my room a little to make it better suited as well. thanks!

soapfloats Thu, 05/07/2009 - 21:17

To actually address your original question, here's how I would approach it:

Vocals, Electric, and Bass in mono.
58 on the vocal, 57 on the electric, and the bass direct.
You may find any of the other mics sound better on your vox - go w/ it!

I would double track the electric (two performances of the same part), and...
If it's the meat of the song, pan each mono track L/R to suit (fairly wide),
If it's more of a lead, pan each mono track L/R to suit (half centered or more).
Maybe change the mic placement or amp settings for the second performance if you want more variety.

And I would record the acoustic in stereo, using a pair of SDCs.
Since it doesn't seem you have two of the same mic (or SDCs), I'd either go with the 57 in close or the Rode just out in front (wherever it sounded best).
Or try any combination until I find what works.
I would pan the acoustic narrow(er) if the electric is the meat, and wide(er) if the electric is a lead.
I like to have my focal points more in the middle if appropriate.

EricIndecisive Thu, 05/07/2009 - 21:57

I see, that makes sense. Thanks! I think I have been doing that anyways, so maybe I'm already on the right track. I posted a song in the mix/critique if you want to check it out.

Is it always better to have acoustic with two mics? I know that usually when the acoustic guitar is the main focus that there stereo sound really helps to fill in the space. But in a mix setting is it generally better to be in mono?

I still don't understand where all the clarity comes in. If you listen to the very first few seconds of the coldplay song Yellow, the guitar is crystal clear, shimmery and stays that way throughout the whole mix. It just seems hard for me to grasp that the equipment makes that large of a difference (and obviously the guy is a pro who recorded them)

MC3DPCS Sun, 05/24/2009 - 20:01

sarNz wrote:

Do you add reverb to everything, even if it's just a little bit?

I don't but I know plenty of people that do. I'm normally pretty light-handed on reverb. I like to find the minimal amount that will work for the desired effect. In many cases, if I have my mics set up right, that minimal amount = none. It gets down to what kind of space you're wanting to present.

MC3DPCS Sun, 05/24/2009 - 20:08

soapfloats wrote: I got the gear bug and it bit me bad.
I would have done some things differently.

Word. Imagine having gear buying foresight!

I grew up lugging my dad's analog gear around as he recorded acoustic music in all kind of spaces. He had great gear for the period that still sounds excellent today. Studer decks, top notch mics, great preamps. But his best piece of gear was his ear/brain. He was patient enough to keep searching for the sound.

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